Who started the mortgage meltdown and using mortgages as mortgage-backed securities and leveraged assets – US has screwed the world’s economies and its citizens – along with everyone in the United States

Salomon Brothers

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This article deals with Salomon Brothers. For other uses of the name Salomon, see Salomon.

Salomon Brothers was a Wall Streetinvestment bank. Founded in 1910, it remained a partnership until the early 1980s, when it was acquired by the commodity trading firm then known as Phibro Corporation. This proved a “wag the dog” type merger as the parent company became first Phibro-Salomon and then Salomon Inc.[citation needed] and the commodity operations were sold. Eventually Salomon (NYSE:SB) was acquired by Travelers Group in 1998, and following the latter’s merger with Citicorp Salomon became part of Citigroup.

During this period however the performance of the firm was not to the satisfaction of its upper management. The amount of money being made relative to the amount being invested was small, and the company’s traders were paid in a flawed way which was disconnected from their true profitability (fully accounting for both the amount of money they used and the risk they took). There were debates as to which direction the firm should head in, whether it should prune down its activities to focus on certain areas. For example, the commercial paper business (providing short term day to day financing for large companies), was apparently unprofitable, although some in the firm argued that it was a good activity because it kept the company in constant contact with other businesses’ key financial personnel. It was decided that the firm should try to imitate Drexel Burnham Lambert, using its investment bankers and its own money to urge companies to restructure or engage in leveraged buyouts which would result in financing business for Salomon Brothers. The first moves in this direction were for the firm to compete on the leveraged buyout of RJR Nabisco, followed by the leveraged buyout of Revco stores (which ended in failure).

In 1991, Salomon was caught submitting false bids to the U.S. Treasury by Deputy Assistant Secretary Mike Basham, in an attempt to purchase more Treasury bonds than permitted by one buyer between December 1990 and May 1991. It was fined 290 million dollars, the largest fine ever levied on an investment bank at the time, weakening it and eventually leading to its acquisition by Travelers Group. The scandal is covered extensively in the book Nightmare on Wallstreet.

After the acquisition, the parent company (Travelers Group, and later Citigroup) proved culturally averse to the volatile profits and losses caused by proprietary trading, instead preferring more slow and steady growth. Salomon suffered a $100 million loss when it incorrectly bet that MCI Communications would merge with Sprint instead of Worldcom. Subsequently, most of its proprietary trading business was disbanded.

For some time after the mergers the combined investment banking operations were known as Salomon Smith Barney, but reorganization has renamed this entity as Citigroup Global Markets Inc. The Salomon Brothers name, like the Smith Barney name, is now a division and service mark of Citigroup Global Markets.

Salomon Brothers’ success and then decline in the 1980s is documented in Michael Lewis‘ book, Liar’s Poker. Lewis went through Salomons’ training program and then became a bond salesman at Salomon Brothers in London. In the work, Lewis portrays the 1980s as an era where government deregulation allowed less-than-scrupulous people on Wall Street to take advantage of others’ ignorance, and thus grow extremely wealthy.

He traces the rise of Salomon Brothers through mortgage trading, when deregulation by the U.S. Congress suddenly allowed Savings and Loans managers to start selling mortgages as bonds. Lewie Ranieri, a Salomon Brothers’ employee, had created the only viable mortgage trading section, so when the law passed, it became a windfall for the firm. However, Lewis believed that Salomon Brothers became too complacent in their newly-found wealth and took to unwise expansion and massive displays of conspicuous consumption. When the rest of Wall Street wised up to the market, the firm lost its advantage.

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Salomon Brothers’ bond arbitrage group was also the breeding ground for the core group of founders and traders (led by, along others, John Merriwether and Myron Scholes) for Long Term Capital Management, the hedge fund that notoriously blew up in 1998.[1]